The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, March 07, 1972, Image 6

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    Page 6
College Station, Texas
Tuesday, March 7, 1972
THE BATTALK
Aggie tracksters fall short in Border Olympics finals
THI
By BILL HENRY
Assistant Sports Editor
For coach Charlie Thomas and
the Aggie track team, Laredo
was not to be “The land of milk
and honey.”
A&M, which shined like a star
after Saturday morning’s prelim
inary events, fell by the wayside
when it came down to the finals
at the 40th annual Border Olym
pics. The tracksters took a lack
luster fourth place finish with
53 points after a string of bad
luck.
Rice and Texas fought it out
for the team trophy with the
Owls getting the nod having a
total of 110 points to 101 for the
Longhorns. North Texas State,
who was not highly thought of
before the meet, copped third
with 66.
The margin of victory for Rice
came on six first place finishes
and three seconds compared to
only three blue ribbons and two
seconds for Texas. Rice had a
decided advantage in the field
events, scoring 36 points to the
Longhorns’ 18. A&M had 16.
In the 880-yd dash, both Willie
Blackmon, who qualified first
and Horace Grant were wearing
the maroon and white in the fi
nals. Blackmon, with a bad start,
had second place cinched, until he
let up at the finish line and was
nosed out to settle for third in
a time of 1:53.0. Grant, who
qualified ninth, won sixth place.
JUNIOR WEEKEND
March 17-18
Fri. Night Frolic — 8-12 Indian Lake
Band: Liberty
Sat. Night Ball — 9-1 Duncan Ballroom
Band: Katmandu
Tickets $6.00 Per Couple
Sweetheart Applications Now Available At Student
Program Office — Deadline Is March 10.
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Open 4 p. m. Monday-Friday—7 p. m. Saturday
“IT S SOMETHING DIFFERENT”
an
After the prelims, it looked as
though A&M was going to make
a run for the money having qual
ified at least one performer in
each running event.
The finals began with the 440-
yd relay, the Ags qualified sec
ond, and the team of Billy Por
ter, Doug Brodhead, Steve Barre
and Donny Rogers hit the tape
in first place with a time of 41.0
which was good for first place.
But this was to be A&M’s only
blue ribbon finish.
The 100-yd dash was a similar
story. A&M had three qualify
for the finals; Marvin Mills, Por
ter and Barre. Mills had second
place until he misjudged the fin
ish line and coasted the final five
yards while dropping to fifth
place. Porter took sixth.
Brodhead got a smooth handoff
and brought the Aggies back in
to the lead. Blackmon ran the
final leg, was boxed in, and A&M
had to settle for fourth in a time
of 3:13.9. TCU took the event
with a 3:13.6, while Rice and
Texas finished with times of
3:13.8 for second and third.
Another downfall was in the
220, where A&M again had three
qualify. Mills and Porter had to
lay out, and Rogers took sixth.
There were some high points,
however. Harold McMahan clear
ed 15’-0 on his first jump in the
pole vault for third place, and
Phil McGuire cleared his perso
nal best of 6-10 in the high jump
taking second place.
Brodhead led the Aggies by
scoring 11% points, finishing sec
ond in the 440-yd dash and run
ning on both relay teams.
Guire did a good job in the 1
jump.”
Friday, at a luncheon given!
the San Antonio A&M €lub,li|
son told the audience of aboull
that A&M is in the midstJ
being a good track team.”
In the 440-yd intermediate
hurdles, David Prince was “feel
ing great” and in second place
going into the ninth and final
hurdle.
High point man for the meet
was Mike Cronholm of Rice with
16 points while Gary Kafer of
Baylor, who won the high jump
with 7-0, was voted the outstand
ing athlete of the meet by the
media present at the classic.
After the meet, Nelson ecb
nearly the same statement as
felt, “Some of the kids are
the brink of doing well. J
and Wayne Mills have
working toward winning
events and are beginning to
into shape and working hant"|
MICI
ittalion
for th<
Aggi
sition
In the mile relay, an Aggie
specialty, another problem arose.
Grant led off and was to hand
off to Wayne Mills. Mills fum
bled the baton and dropped the
Aggies back into fourth position.
“I was feeling so good that I
took only 14 steps between the
two hurdles (usual procedure is
15-17) and hit it,” he said.
Prince finished last and col
lected no points.
TCU finished fifth with 43;
Lamar 36, Baylor 32, SMU 32,
Houston 15 and Texas Tech 10.
“I was real pleased with the
way Doug Brodhead ran,” Thom
as said. “I also thought Phil Mc-
Marvin Mills has had a I
and has been held out of his sjtl
cialty (440-yd dash) until itij
healed and has been running t
shorter sprints. Thomas
that Mills has expressed a dts
to run the 440 next weekend i
the triangular meet with LS|
and Rice in Houston.
Bearcats win two from A&M baseballers
By JOHN CURYLO
Battalion Sports Editor
The Sam Houston Bearcats
managed to quiet the Aggies’
bats Saturday, and the result
was a sweep of the doubleheader,
3-2 and 3-0.
In the two games, A&M got
11 hits, while Sam Houston had
12, but the Aggies committed
five errors, and the Bearcats had
one. The two teams are sched
uled for a 1:00 p.m. twinbill here
Wednesday.
SHSU pitcher Ray Norrell kept
the Aggies under control for six
innings, and his teammates un
loaded for two runs in the fourth
to give him a comfortable edge.
The Bearcats scored on a double,
a single, a stolen base, a wild
pitch and an error and another
double.
In the A&M seventh, Sandy
Bate got on on an error by the
shortstop. The next batter, third
baseman Jim Hacker, hit a long
drive that crashed the 365-foot
marker in right-center field for
a triple, scoring Bate. Hacker
dented the plate on Carroll Lil
ly’s base hit, and A&M left two
men on base when Ricky Clem
ents came in to relieve Norrell
two outs later.
The Bearcats won the game in
extra innings, though, when Ter
ry Roach doubled and Sammy
Monteau walked. First baseman
John O’Leary doubled to end the
game with Roach’s run.
Ironically, the losing pitchers
Saturday were the Aggie aces,
Charles Kelley and Bruce Katt.
Kelley came in for the eighth in
ning of the first game, while an
unearned run tagged Katt with
the loss in the second game,
which he started.
Roach was the man again, driv
ing a base hit between third and
short in the second inning. Mon
teau attempted to sacrifice him
to second, but Katt motioned to
ward the lead runner before fir
ing to first and threw it away.
The run scored on a play in
which two errors were commit
ted.
Sam Houston put another tally
on the board in the fifth frame,
with David Woolley walking, be
ing sacrificed to second, getting
to third on a wild pitch and scor
ing on a sacrifice fly.
They did the trick again in the
last inning, when Jimmy Pitts
walked. He got to second base
on a bad throw in a pickoff at
tempt. A sacrifice moved him to
third, and he scored on a hit by
Paul Leggett.
The Bearcats are 2-4, having
lost to Texas in Austin the week
before playing the Aggies. A&M
is 3-3, with wins coming in three
of four games with Iowa State
last week.
First game
A&M 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 0-2
Sam Houston 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 1-3
Winning pitcher — Ronnie
Kainer; Losing pitcher—Charles
ig Ten
arsity (
The Ag
NBA owner says merger idea bad
Kelley (1-1).
Hits — A&M 5, SHSU 8. E:| i;30
rors — A&M 1, SHSU 1. LOB- ^h.
A&M 6, SHSU 8. Doubles—Ail
1 (Sandy Bate), SHSU 2 (Jact iansU cc
ie Heard, Jimmy Pitts). Tripia uy lost
—A&M 1 (Jim Hacker), Saa It (Trii
Houston 1 (Ricky Clemente) r
Double plays — (A&M) Cara! ^ Aga
Lilly-Jimmy Langford-Buttl j an( j .
Ghutzman.
Second game
A&M 0 0 0 0 0 OdAefirst 1
Sam Houston 0 1 0 Ollri Today’s
Winning pitcher — Ray Bin ome ap
gess; Losing pitcher —Brtict|w a m
Katt (1-1).
Hits—A&M 6, SHSU 4. Enron
—A&M 4, SHSU 0. L0B-AU
5, SHSU 6. Doubles—A&Hi V
(Ghutzman), SHSU 0. Donhl token S£
plays—(SHSU) Terry RoachfeH a £ ail
John O’Leary.
WASHINGTON LAP)—A bill to
allow the two warring pro basket
ball leagues to merge is “uneth
ical, immoral and perhaps uncon
stitutional,” a part owner of a
National Basketball Association
team said Monday.
Testifying before the Senate
antitrust and monopoly subcom
mittee, Marvin Kratter said that
minus two basic conditions, “no
reasonable business purpose
would be served” by the absorp
tion by the NBA of the compara
tively newly-formed American
Basketball Association.
Kratter, a former owner of the
Boston Celtics and now repre
sentative of the Golden State
Warriors, said, “Along with four
other teams in the NBA, the
Golden State Warriors were op
posed to the proposed merger . . ”
“The entire underlying purpose
of the merger, in my opinion, was
designed to eliminate the high-
price, cutthroat competition for
the services of the emerging
‘super-star s’ coming from the col
leges and universities, and as a
method of retaining the existing
OUR NEXT
GOVERNOR
BEN BARNES
and
HIS WIFE NANCY
WANT TO MEET
WITH YOU
The future of Texas is our future.
Becoming governor is not nearly so
important as continuing participation
founded upon faith. We all want to
—HELP BRING A NEW DAY TO
TEXAS.
We invite you to join with us for coffee and to welcome BEN and NANCY
to Bryan-College Station—
CLAYTON'S RESTAURANT 9:00-10:30 A.M.
Wednesday, March 8, 1972
We want all Texas A&M students, employees, and faculty to meet and visit with our candidate for
governor and his lovely wife Nancy. I would like my name to be used in an advertisement such as
the one above.
Kendra Ward
Tom Autray
Judy Winslow
Terry Browning
Ronnie Gafford
Gwendolyn Foote
David B. Spencer
R. B. Jerry McGowen
Paul S. Siebem
Nancy Ondrovik
Bunny Blaha
Jim Lane
H. Clifford Giese
Karl Cook
Jan Bertholf
John C. Dacus
Larry Kara
Olive R. Black
James L. Randolph
Nuldir Lai
John Sharp
Virginia Ehrlich
Laurel Canglose
S. Alan Schmitz
Mr. & Mrs. W. J. Shaw
Gregory Vernon
Lynn Svoboda
Pat Spencer
Sue Matula
Gwen Flynt
Pam Schiefelbein
Chet Edwards
Vickie Wood
Tangia Abernathy
Owen M. Dewing
Keith Kauffing
Peter Miller
James C. McLeroy
C. Scott Williams
Adrian A. Aniaga
Jess Chinske
Bruce Ashford
Russell Loesch
Greg Hoke
Bill C. Greenwade
Randy Parker
Robert N. Watson
Lewis H. Evans
R. Michael Saxton
Oscar K. Oates
Mike Marshall
Bill Christhoper
John A. Kincaid
Guy McCfory
David Fergus
Rene Ffrench
Tony Gunn
Bill Gombeskie
John Brieden
Henry Ostermann Jr.
Rod Johnson
Kirk Hawkins
Gary Reger
Steve Lazzaro
Suzy Parker
Stanley, Friedli
Philip W. Goodwin
Kathy Spell
Linda Todd
H. R. Wortham
Marcia Yaws
Have you stopped to think what a difference a few thousand Aggies and
Maggies with their families would make in an election. Your vote counts;
however, your work and faith will bring a new day for Texas.
B£AfM£Aff/V£S
BEN BARNES FOR GOVERNOR STATE
HEADQUARTERS
302 W. 15th / Austin, Texas 78701 / (512) 474-2481
County Headquarters 3111 Texas Ave., Bryan, Tex.
Paid Political Advertisement
Nicklaus pulls out Doral win,
passes Palmer on money list
MIAMI (A*) — Jack Nicklaus
managed to pull his sagging
game together in the final few
holes Monday to win the rain-
delayed Doral-Eastern Open Golf
Tournament and vault past idle
Arnold Palmer into first place
on the all-time money winning
list.
The 32-year-old Nicklaus man
aged only a two-under-par 70 in
the twice-delayed final round, but
it was good enough for a two-
stroke victory, his second of the
year and 36th of his remarkable
career.
He picked up $30,000 of the
$150,000 purse and boosted his
all-time total — he’s in his 11th
pro season — to $1,477,200.86.
Palmer, 42 in his 18th year, had
led the all-time list for a decade
but slipped to second at $1,471,-
226.83. He did not compete this
week.
Nicklaus finished with a 276
total, 12 under par on the water
logged Blue Monster Course at
the Doral Country Club.
Lee Trevino and veteran Bob
Rosburg tied for second at 278.
Trevino matched par 72 in the
cool and cloudy weather and Ros
burg, the surprise winner of the
Bob Hope Desert Classic last
month, closed up with a 68.
Sam Snead, a 59-year-old star
from another era of golf, made
a big run and finished alone in
fourth at 279. Just three strokes
off the pace, Snead, paired with
Nicklaus in the last twosome,
had a 72 with one birdie and one
bogey.
Julius Boros, a 52-year-old vet
eran, Australian Bruce Cramp-
ton and newcomer George Short-
ridge were next at 280. Short-
ridge had a 68 while Boros and
Crampton matched 69s, Cramp-
ton falling back with a bogey on
the final hole.
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reserve clause portions of the
present day player employment
contracts.”
Kratter said he feels the option
clause and the common draft “will
quickly fall by the wayside, thus
eliminating “the two basic busi
ness reasons for the merger.”
Bill Bradley, star forward of
the New York Knicks, said the
NBA players will agree to a com
mon draft with the rival ABA if
the leagues will give players
complete freedom after their first
two years.
Bradley said the players do
not want a merger, but if one
was necessary, it should include
the players’ offer since they are
the people most affected.
Pro football, Bradley said, al
lows a player to play out his
option and, theoretically, sign
with any team he chooses. How
ever, the team that signs the
“free agent” has to compensate
the former team. This, in effect,
Bradley said, binds a player to
only one team since no other club
wants to pay the high price of
compensation leveled by the NFL.
Earlier Monday, football star
John Mackey, president of the
National Football League Players
Association, said a merger would
virtually enslave players.
He noted the monopoly enjoyed
by professional football limits
only players in moving from team
to team, permitting coaches to
move freely.
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